Follow us on Google News

Can ‘120 Bahadur’ Revive Rezang La for the New Generation

Farhan Akhtar’s 120 Bahadur brings the forgotten heroism of the 1962 Rezang La battle to the big screen. Will the film’s scale and storytelling connect with young audiences largely unaware of this war?

The story of Rezang La has always existed in a paradoxical space in Indian cinema. It is one of the most heroic episodes in the country’s military history, yet its cinematic presence has been faint, almost spectral. Chetan Anand’s Haqeeqat (1964), long regarded as India’s first major war film, gave voice to the sorrow and loss of the 1962 Sino-Indian conflict. It captured the anguish of a nation defeated, and though it alluded to the bravery of Indian troops, it never isolated Rezang La as the defining stage of resistance. For audiences of that time, still reeling from the shock of the war, mourning seemed more immediate than memorialization.

In the decades that followed, cinema turned away from 1962 almost entirely. Where the 1971 war and even Kargil found their cinematic champions in films like Border or LOC Kargil, Rezang La was left to regimental histories, military commemorations, and the occasional documentary. Its visual telling remained confined to niche audiences, while in popular culture the 1962 war was remembered—if at all—as a defeat.

That absence matters more today than ever, because India’s younger population—those born after liberalization, raised in the post-Kargil era of chest-thumping nationalism—have little or no memory of 1962 beyond a line in school textbooks. For them, Rezang La is not part of a living imagination. It is here that 120 Bahadur holds its real significance. More than a film, it is a cinematic reclamation, introducing a forgotten legend to an audience that may not even know the war it belongs to.

The involvement of Farhan Akhtar and Ritesh Sidhwani signals ambition. Their track record—be it Lakshya with its earnest soldier’s arc, or Dil Chahta Hai and ZNMD with their pulse on generational storytelling—suggests an ability to marry scale with human emotion. The expectation, then, is that 120 Bahadur will not simply be a patriotic tableau, but an immersive war drama that humanizes the 120 soldiers while delivering the spectacle modern audiences seek on the big screen.

The trailer, in that sense, becomes a litmus test. It must do two things at once: educate a generation largely unaware of Rezang La, and entice them into theatres with the promise of cinematic scale. On the first count, the glimpses of snowbound terrain, the grit of soldiers preparing for a last stand, and the invocation of Major Shaitan Singh do establish the battle’s historicity. On the second, however, the trailer leaves questions. Does it lean enough into the emotional and visual intensity required to justify the theatre experience, or does it risk appearing as just another patriotic war drama destined for OTT discovery later?

This tension defines the film’s challenge. To draw young audiences into cinemas, 120 Bahadur must transcend textbook patriotism and offer an experience that feels both authentic and spectacular. If it succeeds, it will not only restore Rezang La to the cinematic canon but also bridge a generational gap in India’s cultural memory. If it falters, it risks consigning a story of extraordinary courage to the same fate it has endured for sixty years—admired in military circles, but absent from popular imagination.

RELATED ARTICLES

Latest